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Gilgi, eine von uns

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Gilgi, ein M盲dchen im K枚ln der 1920er Jahre, k眉ndigt ihre Stelle als Sekret盲rin und zieht von Zuhause aus, weil sie das bevormundete Dasein bei den Eltern satt hat. Doch auch das 禄weiche, zerflossene, bedenkenlose芦 Leben mit dem Schriftsteller Martin ist keine Alternative und aus ihrem Leben, sagt Gilgi, 禄soll nicht so?n Strindberg-Drama werden芦. Und da nimmt sie es wieder in die eigenen H盲nde und macht sich wirklich auf den Weg in die Selbst盲ndigkeit. Das Buch, mit dem die 26-j盲hrige Irmgard Keun 1931 眉ber Nacht ber眉hmt wurde.

272 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1931

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About the author

Irmgard Keun

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Irmgard Keun (1905 鈥� 1982) was a German novelist. She is noted for her portrayals of the life of women in the Weimar Republic as well as the early years of the Nazi Germany era. She was born into an affluent family and was given the autonomy to explore her passions. After her attempts at acting ended at the age of 16, Keun began working as a writer after years of working in Hamburg and Greifswald. Her books were eventually banned by Nazi authorities but gained recognition during the final years of her life.


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Profile Image for Lisa.
1,103 reviews3,298 followers
January 9, 2020
This is my third book by Irmgard Keun within a week, and now I have run out of supply (German books being rare here generally speaking, and Irmgard Keun even rarer still), so I will give my fellow Goodreaders a break after this review.

Why this compulsive reading of an author who was virtually unknown to me before Christmas?

Gilgi explains it. Keun's first novel, written at the age of 26 in 1931, explores the new conditions for women in the world after the First World War, a world of new rules and possibilities and of old sorrows and problems. Gilgi's dream is to be independent, autonomous, free from the identity-shattering bondage of married life. She navigates the city of K枚ln in the throes of the financial crisis with open eyes and resilience, watching the poverty and the exploitation of the weak by those who can afford it while celebrating a "room of her own" and a salary to keep her going. Sexuality is both a new bliss and a looming danger, as men still see women as objects to serve their needs rather than as people to share ideas with, but Gilgi and her friend Olga are comfortably aware that they have a deeper solidarity and friendship between them than the lonely men they meet in pubs and in clubs, boasting about their masculinity without feeling true, honest connection in their chosen tribes. In women, the world changes, Gilgi believes.

The one thing that threatens her freedom is her sudden infatuation with irresponsible Martin, who wants her to himself and discourages her from working and staying on track to follow her ideals. Love is the poison that destroys Gilgi's individual goals, while it makes her feel alive and vulnerable like never before.

Finding herself pregnant, without work, and in a relationship with a person who will never take responsibility, she makes the ultimate sacrifice and leaves her town to start afresh on her own, with her child, in Berlin. On the last page, we stand at the station and wave to a young girl who has learned to trust herself more than anyone else, and who is willing to step into the unknown to make life possible for the child she carries.

No wonder Irmgard Keun's female characters were banned by the Nazis a few years later. Such independence of thought and action in a woman was more than threatening to the breeding ideal of a German mother figure: it was an outright rebellion!

Gilgi set an example!
Profile Image for Roman Clodia.
2,798 reviews4,350 followers
April 27, 2025
Oh, she's still young, and she's open to all ways of providing for herself, except as a wife, a film actress, or a beauty queen.

First published in 1931 under the twilight of the Weimar Republic before the Nazis came to power in 1933, this is a surprising and tense look at what options for living were available for a young and energetic 'New Woman'. Gilgi turns 21 at the start and is a strikingly self-sufficient young woman: she prioritises economic and erotic freedom - she has a job as a typist and various men with whom she has had relationships - but she isn't searching for a 'career' and there's something a bit stilted about her ambitions epitomised by her rules e.g. about cold showers and the limits she sets on herself. Her more bohemian friend Olga laughs fondly at Gilgi's 'sober soul of the little shopkeeper', her bourgeois longings, and wants her to think bigger and more creatively. But then she introduces Gilgi to Martin... At which point this switches into a different kind of story because Gilgi falls into a crazy kind of self-harming and obsessive love - within minutes, her hard-won independence vanishes and she is left in thrall to this careless man who refuses to take responsibility for anything.

One of the things I like about this book is the way Keun doesn't make it easy for us to navigate it in terms of ideology: Gilgi's idea of 'freedom' was always compromised by her own self-imposed limitations shown, for example, by her accommodations of her lecherous boss who she sweetly manages. Similarly, her proscribed emotional life such as her cool relationship with her parents and her dismissal of various men ends up in a backlash where she goes to the other extreme with Martin - a man loaded with red flags for us as readers.

In the end, Gilgi goes through a crisis , recognises what she has to do to reclaim any kind of independence of mind and life and we are left with an open-ended finish - though internal indications seem to me to more than hint what might happen after the book ends .

This isn't an overtly political book though there are indications of what is happening in the background: hyperinflation is destroying livelihoods and businesses are letting staff go or collapsing; there are street fights between communists and Nazis; there's an especially emotive story that intersects with Gilgi's own and which precipitates her final actions.

But there is no easy moral or message in this book: Gilgi is both adorable and trapped, even self-trapped, and there is no simple way of finding liberation. Of the women in the novel, it's Olga who I loved most, but she has her own implied painful back-story that she carries with her. There are too many other stories sprinkled through the book about women's roles and the careless behaviour of men who, almost always (and the exception is no model to follow), get their own way and, certainly, seem to be free from the sense of responsibility and guilt that Gilgi feels.

For all the fascinating material, it's Keun's writing which really sealed the deal for me: she has mastered an experimental style that switches easily mid-sentence from 1st to 3rd person, jumping in and out of various characters' heads, and without ever making this feel formally 'experimental' or confusing. The result is a dynamic and proactive form of prose that progresses seamlessly - together with the lack of chapters, this feels like a story which advances unstoppably, and which is hard to put down.

It's especially chilling reading this with the hindsight that Keun didn't have: what will happen to Gigli as the Nazis come to power in just two years, and how do the gender roles we see in this book fare under fascist ideologies around the feminine and masculine? It's no surprise to hear that this was one of the books that the Nazi regime decided needed to be burnt.
Profile Image for Left Coast Justin.
554 reviews173 followers
September 22, 2023
Books like this tempt me to take the path of my GR friend Fionnuala and ditch the star-awarding system altogether. Did I like this book? Yeah. Life-changing? Not really. Was it the story I'd hoped to hear? Not at all. Am I glad I read it? I am, I am.

But I was a bit discomfited at first by the whiffs of Ayn Rand arising from the pages as our plucky 20-year-old heroine, with no apparent irony, delivers a homily for waking up early, cold-water showers (for the simple sake of discipline), working hard in an office and putting away all the money for a long-dreamed-up trip away -- to study the language, not to sit at a cafe falling in love with a dreamy stranger. How....common some people's dreams are!

The writing is fresh and readable, and it's easy to forget that it was written during very tough times, when a large part of the workforce was buried under white crosses or simply squashed into the mud of France or Belgium. A time when wartime reparations rendered the lovely and fun-loving city of Cologne a gray and dismal place. But our heroine Gilgi is unbowed:
Gilgi looks out the window. The hopeless people in the streetcar--no, she has nothing in common with them, she doesn't belong with them, she doesn't want to belong with them. They're gray and tired and lifeless. And if they're not lifeless, they're waiting for a miracle. Gilgi isn't lifeless, and she doesn't believe in miracles. She only believes in what she creates and what she earns. She isn't satisfied, but shes' pleased. She's earning money.
But it's not all bleak. I like her description of a friend: "A well-disposed God attached a champagne cork to her soul."

The struggle here is really hard-wired into Gilgi's brain, the conflict caused when the slow process of evolution confronts the brutally-fast rise of H. sapiens as change agents supreme of the planet. The latter has created a reward system based on little paper rectangles, and more recently by a bunch of numbers on a screen, that people use to calculate their spot in the social heirarchy and which can be traded for the fruits of others' labor. The former has created a reward system based on skin-to-skin contact, the scent of those close to you and the joy of conversation.

These two reward systems are rarely aligned, and at some level the conflict between the two is what led to all those dead bodies in the mud and to the Gilgi's careful little apple cart of a life being kicked to the curb.

Gilgi is easier to admire than to love, but Keun did a great job of helping me to understand her.
Profile Image for Kirsty.
2,767 reviews177 followers
February 6, 2017
Gilgi (full title, Gilgi, One Of Us) has been presented in a new English translation as part of Melville House Publishing's Neversink Library collection. First published in its original German in 1931, Irmgard Keun's debut novel, published when she was just twenty-six, has been rendered into the most beautiful English prose by Geoff Wilkes. In Germany, Gilgi became an overnight sensation, and Keun was driven to sue the Gestapo several years afterwards for blocking her royalties.

The protagonist of Gilgi is Gisela Kron, a 'disciplined and ambitious secretary' in a hosiery business. Immediately admirable with her hardworking stubbornness, she is desperately 'trying to establish her independence in a society being overtaken by fascism'. Falling in love, however, is a 'fateful choice' which will 'unmoor' Gilgi from her own position in the world, that which she has fought for so long to uphold. Gilgi is essentially a coming-of-age novel; whilst Gilgi is biologically older than a character whom we might expect to undergo such a formative transformation, she learns much about the world around her, and about herself, as the novel progresses. She is made aware of her own strengths and weaknesses, and the place which she occupies in both public and private spheres in her home city of Cologne.

Keun's choice of opening is fascinating, and very much sets the tone for the whole: 'She's holding it firmly in her hands, her little life, the girl Gilgi. She calls herself Gilgi, her name is Gisela. The two i's [sic] are better suited to slim legs and narrow hips like a child's, to tiny fashionable hats which contrive mysteriously to stay perched on the very top of her head. When she's twenty-five, she'll call herself Gisela. But she's not at that point quite yet.' She is a cool-headed character, and faced with many of the challenges as she is, many other protagonists would have inevitably had some sort of breakdown or existential crisis. Not Gilgi. She is a firm believer in dealing with everything thrown at one, and she does so largely flawlessly.

Gilgi's familial situation is exposed to the reader almost immediately: 'No one speaks. Everyone is earnestly and dully occupied with their own concerns. The complete lack of conversation testifies to the family's decency and legitimacy. Herr and Frau Kron have stuck together through years of honorable tedium to their silver wedding anniversary. They love each other, and are faithful to each other, something which has become a matter of routine, and no longer needs to be discussed, or felt'.

Gilgi is very of its time; Keun is never far away from inserting snippets of social history, or the economic struggles which many around Gilgi faced on a daily basis. So many issues which are still of much importance in our modern society are tackled here - patriarchy, sexual relations, pregnancy out of wedlock, and the very concept of womanhood. It is an astoundingly frank work, both 'piercingly perceptive and formally innovative'. Gilgi is told on the morning of her twenty-first birthday, for instance, that her parents are not biologically hers, and then given the details of her birth mother.

Gilgi herself provides a contrast to the societal norms held for women during the period; she is proactive, has her own job, and pays for her own things: 'I want to work, want to get on, want to be self-supporting and independent... At the moment I'm learning my languages - I'm saving money...'. She may still live at home with the Krons who raised her, but she makes clear that her biggest aim in life is to fund her own apartment.

Until she meets Martin, the idea of being a kept woman repulses her; indeed, even with Martin, Keun has allowed Gilgi her independence. The pair move in with one another to the vacant apartment of one of Martin's friends; he is unshakeable in his existence and largely lives hand to mouth, so it is up to Gilgi to work and pay for everything. Again, tradition is eschewed here, and Keun demonstrates to a point that a woman of the period could make things work by herself. Gilgi's grand ambitions still live within her, even when she becomes conscious that they are not perhaps achievable due to the pregnancy which befalls her naive self.

I was put in mind of reading Dorothy Richardson's Pilgrimage at several points during the novel; the narrative voice which Keun has crafted simultaneously weaves the first and third person perspectives together in a beguiling manner. There is a wonderful stream-of-consciousness approach to the whole in places. Gilgi is a fascinating, deeply complex, and thoroughly realistic character. Each individual consequence which she has to face is tackled with the utmost verisimilitude. Gilgi is a stunning novel, with prose echoes of Hans Fallada and Stefan Zweig. It is absolutely wonderful, and sure to delight those with a fondness for strong female characters, or who want to read a striking piece of translated literature.
Profile Image for verbava.
1,105 reviews157 followers
December 31, 2021
褟 斜芯褟谢邪褋褟, 褖芯 褑褟 泻薪懈卸泻邪 褉芯蟹褨斜'褦 屑械薪褨 褋械褉褑械, 褌芯屑褍 褔懈褌邪谢邪 褩褩 褌褉懈 褉芯泻懈.

褨 胁芯薪邪 褌邪泻懈 褉芯蟹斜懈谢邪 屑械薪褨 褋械褉褑械, 芯写薪邪泻 褍 蟹芯胁褋褨屑 薪械褋锌芯写褨胁邪薪懈泄 褋锌芯褋褨斜, 褨 褌褍谐邪 胁褨写 薪械褩 蟹邪谢懈褕懈谢邪褋褟 褑褨谢泻芯胁懈褌芯 锌褉械泻褉邪褋薪邪.
Profile Image for Quill&Queer.
1,161 reviews570 followers
April 30, 2025
There's some books where the cover serves so much cunt i'll buy it just to post it to my instagram. This was a must read anyway because I'm fascinated by the Weimar republic, and overall I found Gilgi memorable, the story has a rhythm to it that I really enjoyed.

However I did find myself feeling disappointed when she met a man and proceeded to throw away everything she'd built for him, and I found the ending unsatisying. The men in this story are constantly forgiven for all kinds of wrongs as well.
Profile Image for Ray.
675 reviews148 followers
September 28, 2021
Gilgi is 21. She lives in Cologne in 30s Germany. She has hopes and ambitions and is working towards them. She has a relatively safe job and studies languages after work to improve herself.

Then shit happens - just as it always does. In close succession she finds out that she was adopted and she falls hopelessly in love. She moves in with her boyfriend, a drifter with immaculate connections but always short of money. Before long she is workless, pregnant and about to leave her lover.

A gentle, almost twee, insight into a precarious world. I suspect that this book was considered daring when printed (1931) but is tame by modern standards.

An entertaining diversion but not really my thing. I enjoyed The Artificial Silk Girl better

Profile Image for Michelle Curie.
1,031 reviews450 followers
August 13, 2023
What a pleasant surprise to come across Irmgard Keun's vivid prose full of life and characters being human. On top of that this feels more timely than ever, making the fact that it's been written almost one hundred years ago absolutely insane to me.

Gilgi was my first reading experience of Keun's work. It's the novel that made the author famous when published in Germany back in the 30s and tells the story of a young woman who is trying to establish her independence. Working as a secretary and roaming the streets of Cologne, the single lady moves through life handling romancing entanglements next to her ambitions and hopes for the future. When she meets Martin, she decided to indulge in domestic bliss that turns out to not be that peaceful after all.

Gilgi is a fascinating character representing Germany of the 30s. This particular period of time must have been so singular an experience to grow up in 鈥� the people coming of age that decade will either remember WWI or were born into the aftermath of the war. That particular zeitgeist is very present on these pages: Gilgi is a confused dreamer, one who feels hope for her personal future, but at the same time an omnipresent sense of being lost. Keun creates a sober and serious depiction of Germany at the time and her depiction of I'Cologne feels true and alive.

There's a notion of reality in every sentence 鈥� the sentences flow in an almost stream of consciousness effort and the plot rather happens than builds up. It took me a bit to accept that nothing major was going to happen, but that we'd just spend time with Gilgi as she goes on about her days, meets people, runs errands. And only after you finished reading his entire thing will you realise that you did witness a life here, just like in our own reality we rarely identity true plot points or story beats. It's an interesting reading experience.

I'm super intrigued by Irmgard Keun as an author now, even more so knowing that this was her first literary effort 鈥� she already had such a distinct authorial voice and assured way of phrasing her ideas. Makes me more interested in her other works for sure!
Profile Image for Pascale.
1,334 reviews63 followers
April 17, 2020
This book is a masterpiece plain and simple. Like the three other books by Keun I've read, it has a strong female narrator. In this instance, the narrator is a bright and hard-working woman who learns foreign languages in her spare time to improve her employment prospects. On her 21st birthday, her petit-bourgeois parents spring on her the surprise that she isn't their biological child. Although they adopted her from a servant, the story is even more complex because the servant herself was paid by an upper-class family to pass her off as her baby, so as to spare the young lady of the house the stigma of being an unwed mother. All these revelations shake up Gilgi, making her vulnerable enough to fall in love with an older man, Martin, an esthete who's never done an honest stroke of work in his life, apart from writing a couple of books. Gilgi promptly moves in with Martin, whom she loves and desires with frightening and crippling intensity. Initially she tries to make him work and save money, but she quickly realizes that this is futile and will only make him drop her. It is easier for her to adapt herself superficially to his life-style, except that it makes her deeply miserable and ashamed of herself, apart from plunging them ever deeper into debt. Eventually, her salvation comes from an old boyfriend of hers, who now has a family he can't support. In a desperate attempt to save Hans and Hertha, Gilgi finally gets to meet her biological mother. Although her friends commit suicide before she brings them the money they need, Gilgi has learnt her lesson, and finds the strength to leave Martin and flee to Berlin, where she is determined to give birth to the child she carries, and bring up the baby by herself, with the help of her friend Olga. There are many powerful scenes in this novel, including the reunion between Gilgi and her mother. While so many writers pad their coming-of-age narratives with scores of irrelevant episodes, there isn't one superfluous word in "Gilgi", and she gets it all in too. This book articulates a deeply humanist philosophy, and it is a real tragedy that the Nazis were eventually able to silence such a powerful voice. The last scene, when Gilgi is waiting for the train to Berlin and sees an orange lying between the rails is an obvious allusion to "Anna Karenina". Gilgi would have just as many reasons as Anna to kill herself - but she doesn't. No matter at what cost, she will fight for human dignity.
Profile Image for Viktoria.
270 reviews33 followers
June 25, 2011
dieses buch und das kunstseidene m盲dchen sind die besten von irmgard keun. gilgi, eine geschichte um eine junge frau, die zu den "typischen" jungen frauen der 20er geh枚rt, hat keun ber眉hmt gemacht und das v枚llig berechtigt. nicht nur literarisch ein wertvolles buch, sondern auch geschichtlich (zum thema lebensgef眉hl der "neuen frauen" in den 20ern). sprachlich hervoragend!!!
Profile Image for Jayaprakash Satyamurthy.
Author听43 books511 followers
February 18, 2021
Yes, Gilgi is one of us. Thoroughly, timelessly modern. Self reliant, tough, hard working, fun loving, soft hearted, unwise in love but too practical to wind up like that little orange on the railway tracks.
Not sure if I prefer this or THE ARTIFICIAL SILK GIRL by Irmgard Keun, but I like both more than CHILD OF ALL NATIONS - which is also very good.

File alongside Jean Rhys' novels for the picture they contribute to of the lone young woman walking through the cities the fl芒neurs thought they owned
Profile Image for may.
37 reviews140 followers
July 15, 2024
3.8/5

I find myself conflicted about this novel, It took me a whole week just to collect my thoughts and organize them before writing this review. While there were moments I enjoyed, much of the novel felt flat and uneven. And this novel is not even that long, however it took me longer to finish than expected due to its erratic plot and pacing.


The novel is undeniably a character-driven story, centered on Gilgi as she navigates the challenges of work, relationships, and societal norms. However while Gilgi is a well developed protagonist, the side characters lack the complexity one would expect in a character-driven narrative. For instance, Hans who is supposed to play a pivotal role in Gilgi鈥檚 life, comes across as awfully flat and unconvincing. Perhaps only Olga, Gilgi's best friend, is given enough depth to feel real and multi-dimensional.

The pacing of the novel was another issue for me. It felt uneven with some sections dragging and meandering. The emphasis on introspection and internal monologues which I usually appreciate, often detracted from the momentum of the plot. While I enjoy introspection and stream-of-consciousness techniques, here they seemed to drag on too long.

Other than the narrative structure, I am not a fan of fragmented narratives unless they are executed well (and I've read some books with this style which I actually enjoyed) but unfortunately in this case, it did not work for me. The narrative jumps between scenes and thoughts in a way that feels disjointed, rather than adding to the story's depth. And I KNOW this style is intended to mirror the chaotic, fast-paced life of Gilgi and the tumultuous socio-political environment, it came off as inconsistent and inconvenient.

The frequent monologues which can be effective when done well, felt abrupt and nonlinear, disrupting the flow of the narrative. The blurring of lines between dialogue and inner thoughts often made it difficult for me to distinguish between what characters were saying and what they were thinking, leading to confusion in understanding character interactions and intentions.

Additionally, while the narrative primarily focuses on Gilgi, the occasional shifts to other characters perspectives were sudden and unexpected. These shifts along with the numerous jumps between scenes, made the story feel fragmented and gave me a headache at times :|


On a side note, I know it's an innovative narrative style (especially at that time) but its narrative structure and blending of thoughts and dialogue were polarizing and lacking cohesiveness.




On the positive side:

1. The novel is notable for its exploration of themes such as female autonomy, the struggle for self-identity, and the impact of socio-economic factors on personal aspirations (I really loved the projection of the last point in the story) It also highlights many prominent issues that were ahead of their time and, sadly, remain timeless, such as the anti-abortion law case, which women still face today.

2. The protagonist is such an unprecedented character for that time and still now. Gilgi's determination to carve out her own path and assert her autonomy, still resonates with modern readers, making the novel a significant timeless work, especially in feminist literature.

3. I LOVED the social commentary. I did a quick research prior reading to familiarize myself with the historical aspects in the book, and I've seen that Keun's was praised and highly regarded for her sharp social commentary on the Weimar Republic, its socio-economic issues, and the challenges faced by women in a patriarchal society.

4. Keun's writing was surprisingly witty! and engaging with beautiful prose and many remarkable quotes. I suppose this made the unconventional structure appealing to some degree.
Profile Image for Mighty Aphrodite.
524 reviews44 followers
January 2, 2024
La scrittura di Irmgard Keun non ha nulla di artefatto e, proprio per questo, 猫 in grado di parlare al nostro lato pi霉 fragile e riposto, quell鈥檃ngolo oscuro e terrorizzante che vorremmo nascondere a noi stessi e agli altri.

脠 vero, cos矛 come dice il titolo del romanzo, che Gilgi 猫 una di noi, una ragazza giovane e inesperta, che crede che il lavoro sia l鈥檜nico modo per poter mettere ordine nella propria vita, per poter creare una routine capace di irregimentarla, imparando nuove lingue, progettando viaggi all鈥檈stero e traducendo romanzi in tedesco.

Insieme alla sua fida macchina da scrivere Erika, Gilgi si ritira nella sua mansarda affittata per centocinquanta marchi al mese e trascorre l矛 ore di beata solitudine, ore nelle quali le sembra possibile forgiare la sua personalit脿, la sua forza, la sua capacit脿 di affrontare il mondo. Niente le sembra pi霉 importante di quelle ore passate in quella piccola stanza tutta sua, in cui il suo impegno sembra acquisire finalmente un senso, una ragione.

Ma nulla di tutto quello che ha imparato dalle ore di intenso studio, dal tempo trascorso in ufficio o con la sua amica Olga, pu貌 prepararla all鈥檌ncontro con Martin, scrittore squattrinato deciso a vivere la vita intensamente, alla giornata, senza nessuna preoccupazione.

Continua a leggere qui:
Profile Image for lettoesottolineato.
23 reviews11 followers
December 16, 2023
Libro molto godibile. Una storia in apparenza semplice, ma che nasconde tematiche impegnate quali la maternit脿, l鈥檃borto e l鈥檈mancipazione. Solo qualche riserva sullo stile che non mi porta a mettere la quarta stellina. Con la sua penna ironica, Irmgard Keun fa emergere tutta la particolarit脿 di Gilgi, vivace protagonista con una vita abitudinaria in cui le piace abitare. Tuttavia, lo stile 猫 ricco di pause scandite da un importante utilizzo della punteggiatura e tendenzialmente preferisco narrazioni pi霉 fluide. Ma ne consiglio la lettura, anche per scoprire la voce di quest鈥檃utrice, le cui opere furono censurate dai nazisti negli anni Trenta perch茅 ritenute inopportune.
Profile Image for JacquiWine.
641 reviews155 followers
January 11, 2022
I loved this novella, a striking portrayal of a determined young woman set in Weimar-era Cologne. First published in 1931, and subsequently banned by the Nazi authorities, Gilgi (One of Us), was Irmgard Keun鈥檚 debut novel, announcing its author as a powerful new voice in German literature.

The novella revolves around Gisela Kron, affectionally known as 鈥楪ilgi鈥�, a twenty-one-year-old secretary living and working in Cologne. Gilgi is smart, resourceful and efficient. She works hard during the day, barely stopping to catch her breath; then at night she studies languages to improve her prospects, diligently applying herself to each task at hand. Despite living at home with her rather conservative adoptive parents, Gilgi rents a place elsewhere, a room of her own where she can study, be herself and work on her translations.

Idleness is anathema to Gilgi. She has little time for those who appear bored or lifeless. For Gilgi, progression is everything 鈥� she wants to work, to get on, to be 鈥榮elf-supporting and independent鈥�. Hopefully she鈥檒l save enough money to have her own apartment in a few years鈥� time, maybe even start her own business if everything goes well. Whatever it takes, Gilgi has the tenacity to succeed 鈥� even where men are concerned, or so she thinks鈥�

Gilgi is an experienced girl. She knows men, and what they variously want and don鈥檛 want, and how this is betrayed by the tone of their voices, their expressions, and their movements. If a man and a boss like Herr Reuter speaks in an uncertain voice, he鈥檚 in love, and if he鈥檚 in love, he wants something. Sooner or later. If he doesn鈥檛 get what he wants, he鈥檚 surprised, offended, and angry. (p. 10)

One day, just when she鈥檚 least expecting it, into her life comes Martin, a charismatic free spirit in his early forties. In many ways, Martin seems the complete opposite to Gilgi; he is something of a vagabond, an idler who lacks ambition, viewing work as a means to an end, a way of funding his travels in a rather haphazard way. And yet, despite her fierce sense of independence, Gilgi is attracted to him, hoping that he might stay, preferably for a while.

To read the rest of my review, please visit:


Profile Image for Sarah .
423 reviews26 followers
November 8, 2022
Was f眉r eine toll erz盲hlte Geschichte!
Es geht um Gilgi, ein junges M盲dchen Anfang 20 in K枚ln in den 1930er Jahren. Sie ist strebsam, hat ihre Ziele vor Augen und ihre Ansichten im Kopf. Doch das Leben l盲sst sich nun mal nicht immer planen, und man findet sich in Situationen und Umst盲nden wieder, in denen man sein eigenes Verhalten kaum wiedererkennt - das zu realisieren und zu 盲ndern, ist nicht immer leicht und mit Thema dieses Romans.

Ich empfand Gilgi als sehr runden, plastischen Charakter. Ihre Gef眉hle, die Ver盲nderung ihrer Person, alles war emotional und nachvollziehbar geschildert. Der Gedankensteom gibt der Geschichte einen Sog, sodass man kaum aufh枚ren kann. Wunderbar mitnehmend erz盲hlt!

Ich hatte wohl auch Gl眉ck, das H枚rbuch, welchem ich lauschte, war von Camilla Renschke eingesprochen (wohl eher eingeschauspielert). Wahnsinnig toll, wie sie Gilgi ihre Stimme gegeben hat und es zu einem Genuss machte, den doch oft unvollst盲ndigen S盲tzen zu lauschen. Grandios! Die Mischung aus toller Erz盲hlerin und fantastischer Geschichte hat mir unglaublich gut gefallen. Faszinierend, wie aktuell Gilgis Gedanken, Probleme und W眉nsche heute auch noch sind und wie leicht ich mich darin zurechtfinden konnte.
Sehr empfehlenswert, f眉r mich ein kleines Highlight.
Profile Image for Hester.
597 reviews
January 5, 2025
Stunning . Who knew young women were the same nearly a hundred years ago . Stream of consciousness at it's best , immediate and entertaining, this small melodrama is both of it's time and of now .

A bright determined hardworking young woman from a dull middle class family in Cologne has a goal focused approach to life and the discipline to succeed until ... until ... No plot spoilers , just read the book .

Keun refuses to heap shame on our protagonist as she experiences passion , makes mistakes , struggles to reconcile her ambition with the demands of her love affair . The way Keun captures the overwhelming madness of lust is masterful . Gilgi has no chance .

When this novel was published " bad girls " in film and print usually ended up dead or broken . Not these days . Keun ahead of her time . The turmoil of pre war Germany rumbles along in the background, and it's economic realities surface like icebergs throughout the story, but this is a story focused on Gilgi : self centered , confused and utterly believable .
Profile Image for Katla.
9 reviews3 followers
July 10, 2023
脡g tengdi miki冒 vi冒 镁essa. Irmgard Keun skrifar svo g贸冒ar kvenpers贸nur! Gilgi, a冒alpers贸na s枚gunnar, minnti mig mj枚g 谩 Doris - a冒alpers贸nuna 煤r The Artificial Silk Girl (Irmgard Keun, 1932). Ungar stelpur, kl谩rar, dj煤par, sj谩lfst忙冒ar en samt barnalega einl忙gar og drepfyndnar. Margar l铆nur 铆 镁essari b贸k sem 茅g strika冒i undir. L忙t eina fylgja me冒.

鈥�...But anyone who resolves not to get angry already is angry, and anyone who wouldn鈥檛 get upset for anything in the world already is upset.鈥�

Profile Image for Joshie.
340 reviews74 followers
April 25, 2020
A short yet thought-provokingly brilliant work of feminist fiction, Gilgi, One of Us portrays the fragility of women independence at its inception. This independence slowly collapses from ingrained preconceived notions on supposed gender roles in a heterosexual relationship. Financially independent and full of aspirations, Gilgi finds herself torn between making her man happy and making a life for herself. Strong but also submissive, gentle but also unyielding, a hopeless romantic but also a realist, she is constantly tugged by two opposite emotions; puzzled and frustrated between how women should be by society's standards and how women can be outside of these rigid, caging standards. And whilst there are more opportunities for women as they become part of the workforce, albeit often out of necessities, the expectations of them at home remain the same. Men, meanwhile, still have the utmost control of their own lives, their relationships, and their women. Amidst its social and gender commentary which are still intriguingly and unfortunately observed in the present lives of women, what with how women's roles shift depending on social class yet, stripping it off, they are often fraught with intersecting, somehow similar difficulties under the patriarchy, it spices itself with family drama and self-discovery peppered with the numbing political air during the Weimar Republic. Truly an often ignored classic.
Profile Image for Stef Rozitis.
1,654 reviews77 followers
June 13, 2023
It's an interesting book. For about the first half I was avidly reading and wanting to see more of the world. For this I am super grateful to my secret Santa who sent me this book. Once she meets the man she becomes so bland, cliche and boring that it was no fun at all...but the ending is not too terrible. I think part of the problem is I am not really cut out for romance novels (although sometimes I enjoy them when the man is less awful or when there is no man).
Profile Image for Anina e gambette di pollo.
78 reviews33 followers
January 20, 2018
Autrice: tedesca (1905-1982). Romanzo 1931

Il romanzo ebbe grande successo, fu apprezzata da grandi scrittori dell鈥檈poca, meno dal governo nazista che ritir貌 i suoi libri e le imped矛 di pubblicare, una storia d鈥檃more con Roth negli anni della fine, una notizia falsa sulla sua morte le permise di trascorrere in Germania, nascosta, gli anni della fine della guerra, per morire sola, alcolizzata e ospite di cliniche psichiatriche.

Una meteora in quattro righe.

E leggendo questo romanzo si capisce perch茅 non piacesse alla bruna poltiglia della censura tedesca.
Con uno stile leggero che si ferma un attimo prima di diventare rosa o di scatenare lacrime femminili, racconta di una ragazzina che adora una vita precisa e ordinata, il lavoro, la piccola casa in affitto che si paga di nascosto, gli abiti che si cuce, la bella amica di marzapane, la prospettiva di una vita da donna autonoma. Lontana da lei l鈥檌mmagine della vita famigliare borghese, della madre che si droga di dolci.
Riesce anche a barcamenarsi di fronte alle avances del capufficio, ma si trover脿 a dover affrontare una rivelazione sul suo passato, la morte di un amico sconfitto, un amore devastante.
Il tutto in una narrazione dove lei 猫 la sottile ballerina che danza sola, o quasi, riuscendo miracolosamente a non perdere di vista il suo futuro di donna.
Quasi troppo bello per essere vero nella Germania del 1931.

07.06.2017
Profile Image for Peyton.
206 reviews34 followers
November 22, 2021
Dutiful, stupid, bourgeois child - your work will make your face like a cobweb - why?

One morning, a young woman named Gilgi is told by her parents that she is, in fact, adopted. This revelation drives Gilgi to seek out her biological mother through a series of surprising connections. Gilgi is a practical 鈥榥ew woman鈥� whose ambitions are undeterred by the Great Depression. She ultimately rebels against her conservative adoptive family to forge a life of her own.

Irmgard Keun鈥檚 debut novel shows the reader the beginnings of the conversational writing style and perceptive social commentary Keun developed over the course of her writing career. D枚blin鈥檚 influence on Keun鈥檚 prose is very noticeable in Gilgi; the prose includes many stream of consciousness passages, as well as true-to-life dialogue complete with interruptions and illogical sentences. Most memorable is Hertha鈥檚 damning monologue towards the end of the book.

Gilgi didn鈥檛 captivate me quite as much as Doris from , who dreams bigger and falls harder. To be fair, it would be difficult to write an ending as staggering as that of Keun鈥檚 second novel. Gilgi, like Doris, is a deeply dynamic character who left me wondering if the na茂ve young girl from the first pages was the same person as the wise soul from the final pages.

Gilgi is a must read for fans of Irmgard Keun and anybody who is interested in this time period.
Profile Image for Luisa Longobucco.
24 reviews
January 7, 2024
Ho trovato questo libro spassoso e leggero, ma il finale prende una nota pirandelliana di umorismo che lo rende un libro su cui riflettere e non semplicemente una storia divertente, senza comunque appesantire il racconto. Mi 猫 piaciuta la scrittura che tende a modificarsi durante l'evoluzione della protagonista Gilgi. Pulita e chiara nella prima parte, per poi diventare caotica e riportare sempre pi霉 i pensieri confusi della ragazza, in un modo che diventa quasi angosciante ma che sicuramente ben esprime il turbine di sentimenti che investe Gilgi. L'ho trovato anche un interessante spunto di riflessione sull'amore romantico, che nel libro 猫 descritto come distruttivo e obnubilante, e ho apprezzato molto il finale anche per la sintesi che Gilgi riesce a fare tra i suoi sentimenti appassionati e il bisogno di avere una vita degna e di seguire i suoi sogni.
Profile Image for Alessandra Occhipinti.
15 reviews1 follower
March 26, 2024
I continui cambi di punto di vista rendono secondo me difficile seguire la narrazione e il flusso di pensieri e azioni. La scrittura per貌 猫 abbastanza fluida. Nel complesso un libro che si legge abbastanza facilmente, ma che non mi ha emozionata particolarmente.
Profile Image for eve鈥� 啾ㄠ.
44 reviews3 followers
December 11, 2022
My Bible. Each line full of so much meaning, I could study it for years.

But what a tragedy. I didn't expect the ending, it's too harsh, even when presented so lightly.

This book explores love and womanhood so precisely. All the ups and downs of it, the self-sacrificing pain and the sweet sweet pleasure. Love it. 7/5 鈾♀櫋鈾�
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